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In mathematics, concentration of measure (about a
median In statistics and probability theory, the median is the value separating the higher half from the lower half of a data sample, a population, or a probability distribution. For a data set, it may be thought of as "the middle" value. The basic fea ...
) is a principle that is applied in
measure theory In mathematics, the concept of a measure is a generalization and formalization of geometrical measures (length, area, volume) and other common notions, such as mass and probability of events. These seemingly distinct concepts have many simi ...
,
probability Probability is the branch of mathematics concerning numerical descriptions of how likely an event is to occur, or how likely it is that a proposition is true. The probability of an event is a number between 0 and 1, where, roughly speakin ...
and combinatorics, and has consequences for other fields such as
Banach space In mathematics, more specifically in functional analysis, a Banach space (pronounced ) is a complete normed vector space. Thus, a Banach space is a vector space with a metric that allows the computation of vector length and distance between vect ...
theory. Informally, it states that "A random variable that depends in a
Lipschitz Lipschitz, Lipshitz, or Lipchitz, is an Ashkenazi Jewish (Yiddish/German-Jewish) surname. The surname has many variants, including: Lifshitz ( Lifschitz), Lifshits, Lifshuts, Lefschetz; Lipschitz, Lipshitz, Lipshits, Lopshits, Lipschutz (Lip ...
way on many independent variables (but not too much on any of them) is essentially constant". The concentration of measure phenomenon was put forth in the early 1970s by
Vitali Milman Vitali Davidovich Milman ( he, ויטלי מילמן; russian: Виталий Давидович Мильман) (born 23 August 1939) is a mathematician specializing in analysis. He is a professor at the Tel Aviv University. In the past he was a ...
in his works on the local theory of
Banach space In mathematics, more specifically in functional analysis, a Banach space (pronounced ) is a complete normed vector space. Thus, a Banach space is a vector space with a metric that allows the computation of vector length and distance between vect ...
s, extending an idea going back to the work of Paul Lévy. It was further developed in the works of Milman and Gromov, Maurey, Pisier, Schechtman, Talagrand, Ledoux, and others.


The general setting

Let (X, d) be a
metric space In mathematics, a metric space is a set together with a notion of '' distance'' between its elements, usually called points. The distance is measured by a function called a metric or distance function. Metric spaces are the most general set ...
with a measure \mu on the
Borel sets In mathematics, a Borel set is any set in a topological space that can be formed from open sets (or, equivalently, from closed sets) through the operations of countable union, countable intersection, and relative complement. Borel sets are named ...
with \mu(X) = 1. Let :\alpha(\epsilon) = \sup \left\, where :A_\epsilon = \left\ is the \epsilon-''extension'' (also called \epsilon-fattening in the context of the Hausdorff distance) of a set A. The function \alpha(\cdot) is called the ''concentration rate'' of the space X. The following equivalent definition has many applications: :\alpha(\epsilon) = \sup \left\, where the supremum is over all 1-Lipschitz functions F: X \to \mathbb, and the median (or Levy mean) M = \mathop F is defined by the inequalities :\mu \ \geq 1/2, \, \mu \ \geq 1/2. Informally, the space X exhibits a concentration phenomenon if \alpha(\epsilon) decays very fast as \epsilon grows. More formally, a family of metric measure spaces (X_n, d_n, \mu_n) is called a ''Lévy family'' if the corresponding concentration rates \alpha_n satisfy :\forall \epsilon > 0 \,\, \alpha_n(\epsilon) \to 0 n\to \infty, and a ''normal Lévy family'' if :\forall \epsilon > 0 \,\, \alpha_n(\epsilon) \leq C \exp(-c n \epsilon^2) for some constants c,C>0. For examples see below.


Concentration on the sphere

The first example goes back to Paul Lévy. According to the spherical isoperimetric inequality, among all subsets A of the sphere S^n with prescribed
spherical measure In mathematics — specifically, in geometric measure theory — spherical measure ''σ'n'' is the "natural" Borel measure on the ''n''-sphere S''n''. Spherical measure is often normalized so that it is a probability measure on th ...
\sigma_n(A), the spherical cap : \left\, for suitable R, has the smallest \epsilon-extension A_\epsilon (for any \epsilon > 0). Applying this to sets of measure \sigma_n(A) = 1/2 (where \sigma_n(S^n) = 1), one can deduce the following concentration inequality: :\sigma_n(A_\epsilon) \geq 1 - C \exp(- c n \epsilon^2) , where C,c are universal constants. Therefore (S^n)_n meet the definition above of a normal Lévy family.
Vitali Milman Vitali Davidovich Milman ( he, ויטלי מילמן; russian: Виталий Давидович Мильман) (born 23 August 1939) is a mathematician specializing in analysis. He is a professor at the Tel Aviv University. In the past he was a ...
applied this fact to several problems in the local theory of Banach spaces, in particular, to give a new proof of
Dvoretzky's theorem In mathematics, Dvoretzky's theorem is an important structural theorem about normed vector spaces proved by Aryeh Dvoretzky in the early 1960s, answering a question of Alexander Grothendieck. In essence, it says that every sufficiently high-dimen ...
.


Concentration of measure in physics

All classical statistical physics is based on the concentration of measure phenomena: The fundamental idea (‘theorem’) about equivalence of ensembles in thermodynamic limit ( Gibbs, 1902 and
Einstein Albert Einstein ( ; ; 14 March 1879 – 18 April 1955) was a German-born theoretical physicist, widely acknowledged to be one of the greatest and most influential physicists of all time. Einstein is best known for developing the theory ...
, 1902-1904) is exactly the thin shell concentration theorem. For each mechanical system consider the
phase space In dynamical system theory, a phase space is a space in which all possible states of a system are represented, with each possible state corresponding to one unique point in the phase space. For mechanical systems, the phase space usuall ...
equipped by the invariant
Liouville measure In differential geometry, a subject of mathematics, a symplectic manifold is a smooth manifold, M , equipped with a closed nondegenerate differential 2-form \omega , called the symplectic form. The study of symplectic manifolds is called sympl ...
(the phase volume) and conserving energy ''E''. The microcanonical ensemble is just an invariant distribution over the surface of constant energy E obtained by Gibbs as the limit of distributions in
phase space In dynamical system theory, a phase space is a space in which all possible states of a system are represented, with each possible state corresponding to one unique point in the phase space. For mechanical systems, the phase space usuall ...
with constant density in thin layers between the surfaces of states with energy ''E'' and with energy ''E+ΔE''. The
canonical ensemble In statistical mechanics, a canonical ensemble is the statistical ensemble that represents the possible states of a mechanical system in thermal equilibrium with a heat bath at a fixed temperature. The system can exchange energy with the heat b ...
is given by the probability density in the phase space (with respect to the phase volume) \rho = e^, where quantities F=const and T=const are defined by the conditions of probability normalisation and the given expectation of energy ''E''. When the number of particles is large, then the difference between average values of the macroscopic variables for the canonical and microcanonical ensembles tends to zero, and their fluctuations are explicitly evaluated. These results are proven rigorously under some regularity conditions on the energy function ''E'' by
Khinchin Aleksandr Yakovlevich Khinchin (russian: Алекса́ндр Я́ковлевич Хи́нчин, french: Alexandre Khintchine; July 19, 1894 – November 18, 1959) was a Soviet mathematician and one of the most significant contributors to t ...
(1943). The simplest particular case when ''E'' is a sum of squares was well-known in detail before
Khinchin Aleksandr Yakovlevich Khinchin (russian: Алекса́ндр Я́ковлевич Хи́нчин, french: Alexandre Khintchine; July 19, 1894 – November 18, 1959) was a Soviet mathematician and one of the most significant contributors to t ...
and Lévy and even before Gibbs and Einstein. This is the
Maxwell–Boltzmann distribution In physics (in particular in statistical mechanics), the Maxwell–Boltzmann distribution, or Maxwell(ian) distribution, is a particular probability distribution named after James Clerk Maxwell and Ludwig Boltzmann. It was first defined and used ...
of the particle energy in ideal gas. The microcanonical ensemble is very natural from the naïve physical point of view: this is just a natural equidistribution on the isoenergetic hypersurface. The canonical ensemble is very useful because of an important property: if a system consists of two non-interacting subsystems, i.e. if the energy ''E'' is the sum, E=E_1(X_1)+E_2(X_2), where X_1, X_2 are the states of the subsystems, then the equilibrium states of subsystems are independent, the equilibrium distribution of the system is the product of equilibrium distributions of the subsystems with the same T. The equivalence of these ensembles is the cornerstone of the mechanical foundations of thermodynamics.


Other examples

* Borell–TIS inequality *
Gaussian isoperimetric inequality In mathematics, the Gaussian isoperimetric inequality, proved by Boris Tsirelson and Vladimir Sudakov, and later independently by Christer Borell, states that among all sets of given Gaussian measure in the ''n''-dimensional Euclidean space, hal ...
*
McDiarmid's inequality In probability theory and theoretical computer science, McDiarmid's inequality is a concentration inequality which bounds the deviation between the sampled value and the expected value of certain functions when they are evaluated on independent ra ...
* Talagrand's concentration inequality *
Asymptotic equipartition property In information theory, the asymptotic equipartition property (AEP) is a general property of the output samples of a stochastic source. It is fundamental to the concept of typical set used in theories of data compression. Roughly speaking, the t ...


Footnotes


Further reading

* * {{cite journal , last1=Giannopoulos , first1=A. A. , last2=Milman , first2=V. , authorlink2=Vitali Milman , title=Concentration property on probability spaces , journal=
Advances in Mathematics ''Advances in Mathematics'' is a peer-reviewed scientific journal covering research on pure mathematics. It was established in 1961 by Gian-Carlo Rota. The journal publishes 18 issues each year, in three volumes. At the origin, the journal aimed a ...
, volume=156 , issue= , date=2000 , pages=77–106 , doi=10.1006/aima.2000.1949 , doi-access=free Measure theory Asymptotic geometric analysis